Located about four miles south of Atlantic City, Lucy the Elephant has stared out to sea since 1881, making her America’s oldest roadside attraction.

This piece of 19th century advertising architecture is located about 4 miles south of Atlantic City.

The six-storey novelty architecture was built by James V. Lafferty, Jr., a Philadelphia land speculator who needed a big advertising tool to lure buyers for his then-desolate dune lots. Lucy became a popular attraction for Victorian-era holidaymakers on the Jersey shore.

Staff and tours enter Lucy through a door in her leg.

Decades of hurricanes off the Atlantic took their toll, though, and by the 1960s Lucy was facing the wrecking ball. An expensive renovation in the early 70s brought Lucy back to her original glory and in 1976 she was designated a National Historic Landmark, ranking her alongside other sites of national significance like the Alamo.

Lucy’s howdah offers panoramic views.

Today visitors can climb Lucy’s narrow staircases to marvel at her ship-like interior and take in 360° views from the open-air howdah on her back. A peek through her porthole eyes is not just a window onto the beautiful South Jersey shore, it is a window on America’s past.

View of Margate Beach from Lucy’s howdah.

If you go:

Lucy the Elephant is open seasonally for tours; check her website for details.

Margate is a quiet residential beach town about four miles south of Atlantic City, an easy drive down Atlantic Avenue. If you don’t have your own vehicle, I can recommend hiring a car and driver from Ceasar Limousine(609-383-6069). It’s great value for the money, especially if you have a group.

From the Victorian architecture of Cape May to Wildwood’s ‘Doo Wop’ motel strip, Atlantic City is a great base for exploring the history, architecture and beaches of southern New Jersey. For more fun things to do in and around Atlantic City, see Visit AC.

Hi Lesley, I live in New York City, I’ve been to parts of Jersey Shore and in Altantic City, but I’m so embarrassed to tell you that I have not seen Lucy the Elephant 🙁 I heard about her but I didn’t think she would be that interesting. You just inspire me to make it my mission to meet Lucy this year.

Thanks for stopping by, Marisol! Your comment inspired me to look up the list of National Historic Landmarks in New Jersey. Along with architectural gems like Lucy, they include the homes of Albert Einstein and poet Walt Whitman. http://www.nps.gov/nhl/find/statelists/nj/NJ.pdf